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From time to time I hear people completely misrepresenting Dzogchen teachings by saying how no path, practices, stages etc are necessary. Here is what Mipham Rinpoche said:

Joel Agee wrote:

"Is
it necessarily a misrepresentation of Dzogchen teachings to say "no
path, practices, stages, etc. are necessary"? Here is a quote from the
Kunjed Gyalpo, one of the oldest Dzogchen texts, that seems to say
precisely that:

The Ten Absences

1. There is no view on which one has to meditate.

2. There is no commitment, or samaya, one has to keep.

3. There is no capacity for spiritual action one has to seek.

4. There is no mandala one has to create.

5. There is no initiation one has to receive.

6. There is no path one has to tread.

7. There are no levels of realization (bhumis) one has to achieve through purification

"The
ultimate or the way things are is said in dzogchen to be the unity of
primordial purity and spontaneous presence. Primordial purity means
afflictions are not existent, the delusional constructs like existence
and nonexistence, subject and object are
fundamentally nonexistent. But the conventional is the way things
appear. Deluded constructs appear very real to sentient beings. This
needs to be released through practice and wisdom. On the ultimate level
nothing needs to be done, that cannot be said for the conventional due
to strong karmic propensities."

Kyle Dixon replied:

"Though
the kun byed rgyal po is an exposition given from the perspective of
one's nature. As it is a sems sde teaching that focuses on "byang chub
sems" [skt. bodhicitta] which is the sems sde name for the basis i.e.,
the nature of mind.

So from the point
of view of the nature of mind there is nothing to accept or reject,
nothing to improve, no basis, no path, no result. But a Dzogchen
practitioner is not the nature of mind. A Dzogchenpa only works with
his/her knowledge [rig pa] of the nature of mind. And aspirants
initially have no knowledge of that nature to speak of. And then adepts
on the path have an incomplete knowledge that is refined through
familiarization and practice. Finally at the time of the result that
knowledge is complete. But the practitioner has much to do, extensive
meditation, extensive practice. Our nature is perfect, but we as
practitioners are not.

Not understanding these contexts properly creates big issues for people."

More posts by Kyle Dixon:

Larry writes:

"To claim a superiority of understanding by espousing a view still locked in the duality of correct/incorrect is laughable."

You're welcome to believe that, however these systems are no stranger to identifying corrrect/incorrect or higher/lower views. Even your beloved Longchenpa engages in such valuations, stating:

"Some say: 'Cause and effect, compassion and merits are the dharma for ordinary people, and it will not lead to enlightenment. O great yogis! You should meditate upon the ultimate meaning, effortless as space.'

These kinds of statements are the views of the utmost nihilism, they have entered the path of the most inferior. It is astonishing to expect the result while abandoning the cause."

.....

Larry, writes:

"The thing is Kyle the water's fine, always has been and always will be."

I'm not even sure what this means, but if you are stating that the suffering of samsara is "fine" and acceptable (and always has been), then you have unfortunately made a wrong turn somewhere......And
to clarify, I only harp on this issue like I do because I used to carry
the same view: that everything is already perfect... there's nothing to
realize... there's no one here to do anything... there's no such thing
as "correct" or "incorrect"... or
that concepts were the enemy, and so on, and so on, and so on. All the
same narratives you see being spun by most neo-nondual teachers and
systems. I remember I used to argue with a friend/mentor all the time
about how he doesn't get it, and he's just fooling himself with practice
and so on. And I used to cite the same quotations from Longchenpa and
others that were speaking from the point of view of the ultimate, and I
(in my delusion) provided them as proof that I was correct etc.

Then
one day that changed, and I experientially tasted what all of these
masters are pointing to. And I was shown directly that I had been wrong,
and that was very humbling.

That
made these teachings real for me. And surprisingly, instead of
continuing to reject practice, and all of these other aspects of these
systems that I had previously thought to be extraneous and a waste of
time... I saw their value and their place for the first time. It became
clear how and why they are applied, where they fit into the scheme of
things... and I saw the sheer wisdom behind the structures that I had
once mistakenly rejected.

So
I only speak out against those who attempt to propagate the same
mistakes because I've been there. I was so certain that I was right, and
that I "got it", and that others didn't understand. And I was so
wrong... unbelievably wrong.

I'm
no teacher or messiah, I don't have a superiority complex or have some
strange need to be "right", it's nothing like that. I simply speak out
because when I see others who appear to be passionate about these
teachings, making the same mistakes I made, I see myself, I can't help
but to want to say "hey, it really isn't that way." And if all I
accomplish is at least planting some shred of a seed of a possibility
that X person may think twice and consider being open to the fact that
they don't have it completely figured out, then that is good enough for
me. If not, that is alright too, but at least I can say I tried......Larry writes:

"As Longchenpa says, we are free as we are, as free as we will ever be, in this moment. No deferral required."

Seems to be a massive case of confirmation bias going on here in terms of what Longchenpa texts you are reading, and what passages from said texts you are choosing to cherry pick in order to support your view. Because he does not say you are free as you are, quite the opposite in fact:

"Though primordially pure wisdom exists within us, by not recognizing it, we wander here in samsara. This karma of ignorance produces ego-grasping. By that in turn are produced passion, aggression, ignorance, pride, and envy. It is because of these five poisons or kleshas that we are whirling around here in samsara. Why so? As various habitual patterns are superimposed on alaya, we enter into unhappiness.... [after going over the beings who inhabit the six lokas, he states] Each of these (beings) has their own realm ofexistence, with its happiness, sorrow, and the states between them. They have their own sorts of good and evil behavior. So it is that we wander helplessly in this plain of the beginningless and endless sufferings of samsara, so difficult to cross.... Thinking about that, and seeing the weariness of sentient beings, exhausted by the burden of their long wandering here in samsara, I wanted to compose a treatise giving the instructions of how we can ease this weariness."

This is clearly not the exposition of a man who believes you are "free as you are", which means you are taking that statement far out of context......Right,
"everything is primordially liberated" is only true from the standpoint
of having recognized that, and when resting directly in that knowledge
[rig pa].

Those who haven't recognized their nature, which is a vast majority, cannot say everything is primordially liberated, because it isn't for them.

And
then for those who have recognized their nature: in the practice of a
Dzogchen yogin traversing the path, they fluctuate between mind [sems]
and wisdom [ye shes]. So while resting in wisdom, sure every thing
appears primordially liberated, because one is directly and
experientially cognizing emptiness. However once one becomes distracted
and falls back into mind they again perceive phenomena dualistically and
again cannot make blanketed statements like everything is primordially
liberated. Because while in post-equipoise they perceive conditioned
phenomena. The "path" of Dzogchen is the process of gaining stability in
that view, which is no walk in the park.

Only
those who have realized the result can say everything is primordially
liberated at all times. And those beings are rarer than stars in the
daytime, as it is said. Even my teacher Chögyal Namkhai Norbu says he is
not in a direct knowledge of his nature at all times. So to hear people
claim in this thread that they don't need to do anything and that all
is perfect just means they're living in a fantasy. Which is fine, but
should be pointed out as the misconception it is.Which takes years, decades, lifetimes, and is why serious Dzogchenpas spend their entire lives practicing in solitary retreats.The Nyarong Tertön Rinpoche (i.e., Tertön Sogyal) said:

“At
this, the time for discovering Buddha directly, you must remain alone,
without companions, in an isolated mountain retreat—with a staff to the
right, a container of grain to the left, a copper
pot in front, and a cave behind. From now until the attainment of
enlightenment, you must look upwards, entrusting ourselves to the
teacher and Three Jewels, and downwards, into the naked unity of
awareness and emptiness. At all times and in all situations, you must
guard the fortress of the view, just as you would cherish a diamond. And
you must continue meditating until, your eyes turned lifeless and blue,
you breathe your very last breath.”

Again, these are not examples of advice given by individuals who think there's nothing to do and everything is already perfect.